People v. Maciejewski

128 N.E. 489, 294 Ill. 390
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1920
DocketNo. 13393
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 128 N.E. 489 (People v. Maciejewski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Maciejewski, 128 N.E. 489, 294 Ill. 390 (Ill. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carter

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs in error, Edward Maciejewski, John Koch, Matt Yost and Charles Pavlowski, were found guilty by a jury at the February term of the criminal court of Cook county and a judgment was entered on the verdict as. to all of them. This writ of error is sued out to reverse that judgment.

The testimony on behalf of the People was to the effect that about 11 o’clock A. M. on September 24, 1919, Arthur C. E. Schmidt, employed as a clerk by J. V. Zimmer & Co., brokers, 5107 South Ashland avenue, Chicago, was robbed by several men who entered the brokerage office while he was there alone. He testified that at first two men walked into the office and asked him if he purchased Liberty bonds; that both men had revolvers and told him to throw up his hands; that almost immediately a third man came in; that he thought this third man was a customer and was going to call to him for help; that he backed up to the counter and went into the washroom in the rear of the office, the third man following him with a revolver; that this robber told him to' turn his face to the. wall, felt in his pockets and took out his watch, which was worth $30; that the robbers then asked for the keys to the cash drawer, but did not wait for them but took some soft of an instrument and opened the cash drawer, taking therefrom $458.70 and seven $50 Liberty bonds; that they ordered him to remain where he was for five minutes, apparently so they could escape. It appears, also, that there was a fourth man, who remained in an auto outside while these three men were in the office, and that when they departed they entered this auto and drove rapidly away.

Police officers Hartigan, McCarthy and Callahan testified that they arrested the plaintiffs in error Pavlowski, Yost and. Koch on the evening of October 5, 1919, and Maciejewski on the evening of the 7th. They also testified that when they arrested Pavlowski at his home they found two revolvers under a mattress there. Officer Hartigan testified that he assisted in arresting all the plaintiffs in error; that he had a talk with Yost, Koch and Pavlowski when all three were present, the evidence being confined, by an order of court, to these three and was not admitted against Maciejewski; that the witness made no threats and offered no inducements to any of them before they made their statements; that Pavlowski said in the presence of Yost and Koch that another fellow, whom they called “Bum,” went with them up to Fifty-first street and held up a real estate office and that Koch waited outside with a car, and when Yost should scratch his hand (apparently meaning clap his hands) Koch was to come up to the place; that when Koch drove up the three came out and got into the car and went south on Ashland avenue; that Koch went by the name of Brooks and Pavlowski by the name of Peterson; that they went somewhere and divided among themselves the money and bonds they had obtained from this real estate office; that Pavlowski said he owned one of the revolvers and Koch owned the other. The testimony of officer McCarthy was substantially to the same effect as the statements of Pavlowski and Koch. The testimony of both of these officers is also to the effect that no contradiction was made by either Yost or Koch of the state- • ments of Pavlowski at this interview. It appears also from the testimony of the officers that some of the plaintiffs in error at this interview stated that Yost later sold three of the $50 Liberty bonds to Peter Stefan. Stefan was called as a witness forffhe-State and testified that Yost had prior to the trial sold him three Liberty bonds. Officer Callahan testified practically to the same effect as did officers Hartigan and McCarthy, although he further testified that Koch said during a conversation that he did not know whether the fourth man, called “Bum,” was Maciejewski or not; that Pavlowski said he was the man, and Yost agreed that Maciejewski was there with them.

All the plaintiffs in error took the stand and testified in their own behalf, all stating that they had been abused and treated with physical violence by the police in the various police stations where they were held before the trial. They denied that they made any admission as to their taking part in this robbery and testified they had nothing to do in any way with it. The officers all testified that they did not strike any one of the plaintiffs in error during their interviews or make threats or promises to them, and there is no evidence in the record that tends to corroborate plaintiffs in error as to their being threatened or treated with physical violence. If the testimony of plaintiffs in error, or any part of it, is true as to their treatment by the police officers, such treatment would deserve the severest criticism and condemnation and should cause any evidence of admissions obtained by such means to be excluded from the hearing of the jury. The question of these admissions and how obtained was submitted by instructions to the jury, and evidently they must have believed that the statements were freely and voluntarily made by the plaintiffs in error. The jury and the trial court having seen and heard the witnesses testify were in much better position to decide as to the truth or falsity of the testimony of the various witnesses in this regard than the members of this court, who can only read the evidence from the record. There can be no question that it would be the duty not only of the trial judge but of this court to set aside a verdict based on ’any evidence of admissions obtained by such means, as argued by counsel for plaintiffs in error,-and grant a new trial. We cannot say from this record that the conclusions of the jury and the trial judge were wrong in regard to the manner in which these statements or admissions were made.

The evidence on behalf of plaintiffs in error was that they were not at the brokerage office at the' time of the robbery. As already stated, all of the plaintiffs in error testified to that effect. A sister of Pavlowski testified that on September 24 Pavlowski was fixing the porch at their home; that she remembered the date because it was a week after her father’s birthday; that the revolvers in question had been left at their house by a roomer four years before and did not belong to her brother. Mrs. Julia Brooks testified on behalf of Koch, stating that she remembered seeing him on September 24; that she remembered the day because it was Wednesday and she did her ironing on Tuesday. Yost denied any acquaintance with Pavlowski or Maciejewski "but admitted selling Stefan some bonds, but said he bought them from Swift & Co. and the' Hammond Company. Yost had no witnesses corroborating his story that he was not present at the robbery; neither did Maciejewski, although he testified that he was working all that day from 6:3o in the morning until 5 :3o in the afternoon, driving a feed wagon, and had been at that job for the three weeks previous. He also testified that he was not acquainted with any of the plaintiffs in error except a speaking acquaintance with Pavlowski, as his mother was a tenant on Pavlowski’s mother’s property.

The complaining witness, Schmidt, was unable to positively identify any of the plaintiffs in error. He testified that some twelve days after the robbery the police sent for him to come to the police station, saying that they “had someone that did it,” and that plaintiff in error Yost was the only one of the three that he recognized on that day.

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Bluebook (online)
128 N.E. 489, 294 Ill. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-maciejewski-ill-1920.